Has Anyone Seen the President?
A trip to the White House briefing room and Steve Bannon’s living room.
A trip to the White House briefing room and Steve Bannon’s living room.
Michael Lewis Bloomberg Business Feb 2018 35min Permalink
An interview with a Funny or Die writer after the entire editorial team was laid off.
Sarah Aswell, Matt Klinman Splitsider Feb 2018 15min Permalink
When rescuers found Nathan Carman after seven days at sea, his mother had vanished without a trace. Did he kill her — and, years earlier, another member of his family?
James D. Walsh New York Jan 2018 Permalink
A bitter legal row over a mosque in an affluent New Jersey town shows the new face of Islamophobia in the age of Trump.
Andrew Rice The Guardian Feb 2018 30min Permalink
Two girls connected by friendship and strange magic.
Gail Aronson The Offing Feb 2018 Permalink
American adolescents watch much more pornography than their parents know.
Maggie Jones New York Times Magazine Feb 2018 20min Permalink
A team of researchers at Columbia believe that small changes to college life could make campuses safer.
Jia Tolentino The New Yorker Feb 2018 20min Permalink
Liliana Segura writes for The Intercept.
"My form of advocacy against the death penalty, frankly, has always been to tell those stories that other people aren’t seeing. And to humanize the people—not just the people facing execution, but everyone around them."
Thanks to MailChimp, Mubi, and Tripping.com for sponsoring this week's episode.
Feb 2018 Permalink
The many identities of Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace’s murderer.
Maureen Orth Vanity Fair Sep 1997 45min Permalink
The origins of an explorer.
Spencer Hall SB Nation Feb 2018 25min Permalink
The hard life and overlooked brilliance of Zane Campbell.
Eddie Dean The Washington Post Feb 2018 20min Permalink
Forty-eight years after being attacked, a St. Petersburg, Florida woman searches for a way to cope.
Can artistry trump athleticism in figure skating?
Patricia Lockwood The New York Times Magazine Feb 2018 10min Permalink
Sitting with a group of mothers who lost a child.
Sarah Conway Chicago Magazine Feb 2018 15min Permalink
A Native American family’s fight for housing security in the city and on the reservation.
Julian Brave NoiseCat High Country News Feb 2018 20min Permalink
Traveling the highway that could make Brazil an economic powerhouse — at the expense of the Amazon.
Stephanie Nolen The Globe and Mail Jan 2018 45min Permalink
An indecent proposal, a crime of passion, and legends of murder in an enclave of bohemian retirees.
Chris Walker The Atavist Jan 2018 45min Permalink
How a solitary trek across Antarctica became a singular test of character.
David Grann New Yorker Feb 2017 1h25min Permalink
A New Orleans football legend reached the pinnacle of the sport, playing in three Super Bowls. Then he disappeared.
Ted Jackson The Times-Picayune Feb 2018 25min Permalink
When Clark Rockefeller snatched his daughter during a custody dispute, what the D.A. called “the longest con I’ve seen in my professional career” came unraveled, and the trail led to bones buried in a California backyard.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2009 50min Permalink
“Choice is a great burden. The call to invent one’s life, and to do it continuously, can sound unendurable. Totalitarian regimes aim to stamp out the possibility of choice, but what aspiring autocrats do is promise to relieve one of the need to choose. This is the promise of “Make America Great Again”—it conjures the allure of an imaginary past in which one was free not to choose.”
Masha Gessen NY Review of Books Jan 2018 15min Permalink
The many problems with a common forensic technique called “pattern-matching” — comparisons of bite marks, tool marks, hairs, shoe prints, tire tracks, or fingerprints.
Meehan Crist, Tim Requarth The Nation Feb 2018 45min Permalink
Deep Throat, unmasked.
John D. O'Connor Vanity Fair Jul 2005 30min Permalink
Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on—water.
Mark Arax California Sunday Jan 2018 1h20min Permalink
Their boss allegedly committed sexual assault and abuse. He denied everything. They had to decide: Who do I believe? What do I do?
Eli Sanders The Stranger Jan 2018 45min Permalink